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anaheim-gazette 1883-01-06

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WEEKLY GAZETTE. SATURDAY... JAN. 6, 1853 SUBSCRIPTION, per year, $2. SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT. We offer the Gazette in combination with the American Agricultural for $3 a year (cash in advance), which includes postage on both. In addition, we will send free to every person who takes both papers, a magnificent Plate Engraving of Dupre's last great painting, "IN THE MEADOW," now on exhibition in New York, and offered for sale at $5000. The eminent Artist, F. S. Church, writing to a friend in the country last October, thus alludes to this picture: "I was delighted this morning to see offered as a premium a reproduction of a very beautiful picture, 'In The Meadow,' by Dupre. This picture is an educator." This superb engraving (17 by 12 inches, exclusive of wide border) is worth more than the cost of both Journals. It is mounted on heavy plate paper, and sent securely packed in tubes made expressly for the purpose. When to be mailed, 10 cents extra is required for packing, postage, etc. NEW YORK'S SUNDAY LAW. The Sunday law which is now being enforced in New York, is creating much strife and bitter feeling. The law is harsh, imperfect, and every policeman is at liberty to put his own construction upon it; hence it is made an engine of oppression. Some of the fanatics also are making it odious by reason of their ill-directed zeal. For instance, we read: Stephen Provost, the President of the Sunday Closing League, entered Henry Waters' music store, at 266 Bowery, last evening and asked to see a music box. Mr. Waters who says he was cleaning up his EDITORIAL NOTES. A snow storm in San Francisco last Sunday gave the inhabitants of that city a chance to snowball each other. Three inches of snow fell and the thermometer dropped to 34 degrees. A city paper sarcastically remarks: "Never had any of this Los Angeles weather here before." Three colored laborers on the Kentucky railway put wet dynamite in a stove to dry. The stove and the laborers were demolished. This is an accident—if "accident" it may be called—of frequent occurrence of late, and goes to prove the old saying that "all the foods are not yet dead." But dynamite is a good agent to thin them out. Very singular indeed were the charges made against Rev. Roland D. Grant, pastor of the Baptist church of Poughkeepsie. He was charged with rebuking two men who were smoking in a street car; with wearing a flannel shirt at a watering place; with putting his food in his mouth with his knife instead of his fork; with being seen sitting on a sofa with his wife, both eating from the same banana. These specifications were the basis of a general charge of conduct unbecoming a minister, and he was forced to resign. What a queer creature a Poughkeepsie Baptist must be! It is fearful to contemplate the evil which that wicked man, Garfield, would have wrought to our country had not Guiteau removed him! Such, at least, is the conclusion one must arrive at if he reads and believes all that the New York Sun, and the half hundred other journals which ape it, are saying now of the dead President. Not content with abusing him when alive, the Sun and itsimitators carry on their work of besmirchment even after the object of their hate is dead. In about another year they will be starting a penny subscription for a monument to Guiteau. The fruit-growers of Delaware and Maryland are in arms against what they consider an injustice. It seems that hundreds of The Sunday law which is now being enforced in New York, is creating much strife and bitter feeling. The law is harsh, imperfect, and every policeman is at liberty to put his own construction upon it; hence it is made an engine of oppression. Some of the fanatics also are making it odious by reason of their ill-directed zeal. For instance, we read: Stephen Provost, the President of the Sunday Closing League, entered Henry Waters' music store, at 266 Bowery, last evening and asked to see a music box. Mr. Waters, who says he was cleaning up his store, showed him one. Mr. Provost decided to take it, and a price was agreed upon. He then called a policeman and made a complaint against Mr. Waters, who gave bail at the Mulberry street police station. Now, our opinion of Mr. Provost is that he is a very low, dirty fellow. It is such ill-advised, foolish actions upon the part of those prominent in the movement that is bringing odium upon it, and will eventually result in its repeal. The principle, the theory of so-called Sunday laws is good—to secure a day of rest and recreation more especially for the poor. But the extremists are not content with this; they want Sunday to be kept solely as a day for religious observance, and in trying to enforce their views they render null and void the efforts of those who desire it set apart as a day of rest. Rev. Robert Collyer, one of New York's brightest divines, exorcized these "uncoguid" people in a recent sermon. He said: "A small body of the community have sought to call up the ghost of the old Puritan Sabbath and force people, under penalty of bonds and imprisonment, to pay the ghost proper regard. They have brought a doleful sound from the tomb that has been heard with dismay by the poor, who have been only barely able to make both ends of a scanty living meet by the little trade they do on Sunday. I say it is part of the narrow bigotry of Calvinism, and a cruelty and injustice to the poor, that such law should be on the statute books, or should be enforced. I thank, from my pulpit, those magistrates who have ignored the letter of this law, and have shown in their interpretation of it some of the spirit of that Master who Himself broke the Sabbath which the rigid religionists of His time were wont to enforce. "I say it has smitten the poorest with an unjust cruelty, and has let the rich go unscathed. It is not the large and free law that should belong to New York in the nineteenth century. I say once for all that I shall fight it with all the power I can summon as a law that gives birth to hypocrisy and double dealing, and that comes of the old spirit of bondage. It must be repealed, and replaced by a new law that freemen, broad minded, deep thinking men, can endorse and respect, and observe cheerfully. "I plead with all my heart for a day of rest. I would have it assured by law if need be. But let it be a free day. Let the poor man work if he will on that day, or if he can live the easier for it. I would throw open the museums, galleries and libraries on that day. I would say to the boy, you can go to Sunday school or you can swim, or skate, or play ball, as you will. I'd lay no ban on the music hall, for pure, clean music is good. I would let the lecturer speak as well as the preacher. I would let men go into the country if they liked it better than session one must arrive at if he reads and believes all that the New York Sun, and the half hundred other journals which ape it, are saying now of the dead President. Not content with abusing him when alive, the Sun and its imitators carry on their work of besmirchment even after the object of their hate is dead. In about another year they will be starting a penny subscription for a monument to Guiteau. The fruit-growers of Delaware and Maryland are in arms against what they consider an injustice. It seems that hundreds of them use hot air evaporators to dry their fruit, and that Charles Alden, the patentee of the Alden Fruit Dryer, considers all hot air evaporators as infringements upon his patents. He brought suit against them for infringement of his patents, but lack of money prevented him from pushing the suits. Recently, however, he sold his patents to a company, who have renewed the suits and evinced a determination to press them. The fruit-growers in the two States named have formed an association to defend these suits, and long and costly litigation will doubtless ensue. They do these things better in England. For publishing an article applauding the assassination of the Czar, Mr. Most was thrown into an English prison and kept there until his sentence expired. Immediately on re-gaining his liberty he comes to America, "the land of the free" and starts upon a lecturing tour, advising his hearers to "kill the capitalists, and help themselves to the funds in the banks and the goods in the stores. The people should prepare powder and bombs in anticipation of the time when the rising would take place." This is the talk of a fool to fools; and if this Most is permitted to continue in this strain he will so milame the bad passions of the men whom he addresses that trouble will ensue. It is a crying shame that he should be permitted to talk in this way, more especially as there are laws for bidding it. But the Communists, Socialists and others of that ilk are a power in the large cities; they have votes, and cast them as one man. Hence the officials whose duty it is to see the law enforced are loth to stop the foul outgivings of this fellow, in fear that by interfering with him they will incur the political hostility of the mob whose God he is. There are in England, Canada, and in the State of New York, companies organized and incorporated after the manner of fire and life insurance companies, but which have for their object the furnishing of bonds for all elective officers of whom bonds are exacted. To illustrate: A County Treasurer has to give bonds, and either through a spirit of independence, or diffidence, he does not desire to ask his friends to become his bondsmen. He makes application to the company in much the same way as he would if applying for a fire insurance policy. The company inquire as to his integrity, and if satisfied, they furnish to the county required bond, the Treasurer paying them a certain 3. Hours week that day the net profit less than old he would times as much hog does not orange tree, smell, and e bloom would may be said self, but still under one o with each other them. The and exhausts and richer t is true he ne himself but alfalfa,a fe corn to counting in expenses have in the other here. For t activating or pictures his creawhig his roo sects do not weaken wind cannot crop. He fa So much f hog at 3 years bring him ev tree,$120.acre,viz acres bring million for farm worth.at last is wh Strangers which crops and double dealing, and that comes of the old spirit of bondage. It must be repealed, and replaced by a new law that freemen, broad-minded, deep-thinking men, can endorse and respect, and observe cheerfully. "I plead with all my heart for a day of rest. I would have it assured by law if need be. But let it be a free day. Let the poor man work if he will on that day, or if he can live the easier for it. I would throw open the museums, galleries and libraries on that day. I would say to the boy, you can go to Sunday school or you can swim, or skate, or play ball, as you will. I'd lay no ban on the music hall, for pure, clean music is good. I would let the lecturer speak as well as the preacher. I would let men go into the country if they liked it better than going to church. I would have a Sunday that would give art and heart as free play as religion." Rev. Dr. Shipman, of the Episcopal church, said: "There is a religious day of rest and a civil day of rest, but the State has no right to command people to keep the Sabbath as a religious Sunday. The two come on the same day, but the State has not adopted the Christian Sabbath only the day on which it falls. Church and State must be kept apart, and the Sunday Leagues do not see that their success would be a very dangerous precedent. We may believe that opening museums, parks and reading rooms on Sunday or having excursions by boat and rail are wrong, but we have no right to ask the State to stop it." The Independent, discussing the same subject, says: "The Sunday of the law, as distinguished from Monday or any other day of the week, is simply 'a civil and political institution,' recognized and established by the State from reasons of public policy, and these alone. The Sunday of Christians, as such, is a purely religious institution, resting for its authority not upon the State, but, in their judgment, upon the will of God. They keep it as 'holy' time, not simply by resting from ordinary labor, but by specially devoting the time to the worship of God, and, in so doing, mean to obey what they regard as the law of God. These two institutions coincide only in the day, and in all other respects are as wide apart as the poles. They should be kept apart in all legitimate efforts at Sabbath reform. The State has nothing to do with Sunday as a purely religious day, or with the reasons that demand and enforce its observance as such a day. Its sole function is to regulate it as a rest day, and that, too, for reasons that apply equally to all the people, and not particularly to Christians, who keep it as 'holy' time." It is stated at the Postoffice Department that an Inspector will visit the Pacific Coast next month, to examine into the needs of free delivery at several cities now entitled to it by law. Among these is Los Angeles, which, both in postal receipts and in population, is entitled to free delivery. The death of Gambetta, the French statesman, is announced. His death was simultaneous with that of 1882, for he expired at about midnight of December 31st. The cause was pyamia, or blood poisoning, superinduced by a pistol wound received some time ago. Referring to the manner in which the wound was inflicted, the French journals say that the shot was fired by a woman with whom Gambetta was intimate, and who was inspired to the deed by jealousy. Gambetta was a man of great force and influence, a hearty hater of the Germans, and anxious to wipe out the stain of the defeat which culminated at Sedan. As an illustration of the feeling in Germany, we quote the utterances of two prominent newspapers: The National Zeitung says: Germany has lost her greatest enemy. Gambetta knew his reputation in the future was bound up with a war of revenge, and his whole energy was directed in preparing therefor. He may be said to have constituted himself a permanent danger to the peace of Europe. The Tagbatt says: A man of uncompromising revenge is dead. His decease affords us better security for peace than any sort of alliance. His grandly constituted character commanded certain respect, even from his enemies, but now there is no necessity to conceal the fact that the peace of Europe appears to be more lastingly secured than for a long time. THREE WAYS OF GETTING RICH. Do Figures Lie?—Are These Facts Deceptive? Ed. Gazette:—The strangers that are coming into Southern California are often uncertain what kind of an investment to make. An old settler would advise them to study figures carefully. Facts may be deceptive, but figures cannot lie. It is well to have both. If he can get a fair idea what income a piece of land may be expected to bring, when improved according to his notion, then he has a just basis for the value of the land he wants to buy. We will take three representative crops. 1. Apples. A Greening or Pearmain apple tree, in flourishing condition, will bear at ten years old at least 500 pounds of apples. These are cheap at wholesale at one dollar per hundred pounds, which makes $5 per tree. Seventy trees to the acre. Therefore the income would be $350 per acre. Twenty acres would bring in $7,000 per year, a comfortable living. The farm may be valued at $5,000 per acre, or $100,000. 2. Oranges. An orange tree in good condition at ten years old should bear 1000 oranges, worth $20. Seventy trees to the acre. Therefore the income will be $1400. Twenty acres would bring in $28,000 per annum. The farm may be valued at $20,000 per acre, or nearly a half a million. The owner may consider himself a financial success. Now, these figures have been treated so often, and arrayed on the basis of fact in so many ways that all are familiar with them. We know the men that own the beginnings of just such farms. We meet them on the streets and they are not too proud to shake hands with us. Any stranger may venture to accost them and verify all the facts and figures, and it would richly repay him to go through their orchards and get their experience. But there is a third crop richer by far. PACIFIC COAST NEWS. The Legislature convenes at Sacramento on Monday. A fire in Hanford on Wednesday morning destroyed four buildings. Loss $25,000. W. S. Morton, Democratic Assemblyman-elect for the districts of Kern and Tulare, died last week at Hanford after a brief illness. A. H. Barlow was found dead in his room at the Western Hotel at Sacramento last Friday. He was asphyxiated, having blown out the gas. Two young men—John Dever, aged eighteen, and Charles Shaffer, aged seventeen—employed in the Vallejo Times office, were frozen to death while out hunting last Sunday. Miss Addie Hall, aged twenty-one, a native of Illinois, died suddenly on Tuesday, at Pantano, on an emigrant train. She was being taken by her parents to Southern California for her health. George P. McConkey, County Treasurer of White Pine county, Nevada, was found dead in his office at Hamilton, with a bullet in his brain. The safe in which the county funds were kept had been ransacked. The murderers have not been found. The fraternity of the different secret societies, near the Kimball school district, Shasta county, are considerably excited over the expose of their secrets by a minister preaching in that vicinity, who claims to have done so to advance church interests. Deputy County Clerk Kay, of Alameda county, is a fugitive from justice. He has succeeded in drawing about $10,000 from the county treasury on warrants which he stole from the warrant book. The loss will fall on County Clerk Ryder. Kay was known as a gambler and high liver. "Lucky" otherwise E. J. Baldwin, was shot in the arm at his hotel in Sau Francisco on Thursday by a woman named Faunte. LONDON, Dec. 30th.—The most tangible thing in Ireland is the distress and mourning of the people in the western districts, particularly in the places where there are hundreds of evicted families without shelter or starving. The information about them derived chiefly from the Catholic priests whose own resources are all exhausted; about whose dwellings the unfortunate creatures are gathering; begging piteous for a potato or for a pound of corn no longer there are no members of the human condition is so objectively wretched that of the starving people in the west Ireland. Whipped coffee cream for one who loves the coffee flavor is perfectly delicious to last morsel at a formal dinner or an afternoon lunch. Take two ounces of coffee beans and roast them; while fresh and warm put them in one pint of rich creme which you have sweetened liberally with sugar. Let this stand for an hour; strain it through a muslin cloth laid in colander; dissolve a teaspoonful of gelatin in a little cold milk and add to the creme then whip it to a firm froth. The gelatin may be dissolved in a little orange water lemon extract if you choose. A pint of the finest ink for families schools can be made from a ten-cent pack of Diamond Dye. Try them. —Receipt books, order books; note books etc., printed on heavy paper and bound substantial form, are kept in stock at GAZETTE Job Office. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. VINEYARD OF TEN ACRES OF RAINFORENS CAN BE RENTED AT A VERY REASONABLE FORMAT BY CONTRACT. For particulars apply on the premises: Counter Street, Anaheim. MRS. M. W. LEWIS Now, these figures have been treated so often, and arrayed on the basis of fact in so many ways that all are familiar with them. We know the men that own the beginnings of just such farms. We meet them on the streets and they are not too proud to shake hands with us. Any stranger may venture to accost them and verify all the facts and figures, and it would richly repay him to go through their orchards and get their experience. But there is a third crop richer by far than these that has not had much written about it. It is not painted in gay colors like the rosy apple or gilded like the yellow orange. It is cultivated without ostentation, not in front lawns usually, nor in public squares, but rather in out-of-the-way corners, or behind fences, or in little special closures. In fact many people look on this crop as a thing not so nice to talk about as oranges, though containing great riches, and like a swill barrel good for what it is worth rather than for what it is. They tell of results, and not of details. Hence, perhaps, the lack of reliable figures from reliable facts, about which strangers ought to be posted. We therefore investigate for our third crop. 3. Hours. A neighbor killed a hog last week that dressed 516 pounds. At 8 cents the net profit is $41.28. The hog was probably less than three years old. At ten years old he would yielded of course three times as much at least, say $120. Now a hog does not take up as much room as an orange tree, unless you count the area of the smell, and even then the orange tree in fall bloom would probably distance him. He may be said to have roots, for he roots himself, but still three hogs may lie comfortably under one orange tree without interfering with each other, if there is a fence between them. The orange trees feed on the land and exhausts it. The hog makes it richer and richer till he fairly rolls in wealth. It is true he needs to be fed, instead of feeding himself, but he feeds in wastes, and a little alfalfa, a few pumpkins, and some barley and corn to finish him off are not worth counting in the expenses. In fact, trivial expenses have not been taken into account in the other calculations, and much less here. For the hog needs no plowing or cultivating or pruning or irrigating. He matures his crop quicker. Gophers do not gnaw his roots, scale bugs avoid him, insects do not hurt him, over-irrigation does not weaken him, and a howling Riverside wind cannot throw him down or loosen his crop. He fairly bristles with good points. So much for facts, now for figures. One hog at 3 years equals $40. At ten years, to bring him even with the apple and orange tree, $120. Three times as many to the acre, viz: 210 @ $120—$25,200. Twenty acres bring in $504,000, a fair clean half million for the year's income, with a little farm worth, say five million dollars. Here at last is what may be called riches. Strangers can consult their taste as to which crops they will select. But if after exposure of their secrets by a minister preaching in that vicinity, who claims to have done so to advance church interests. Deputy County Clerk Kay, of Alameda county, is a fugitive from justice. He has succeeded in drawing about $10,000 from the county treasury on warrants which he stole from the warrant book. The loss will fall on County Clerk Ryder. Kay was known as a gambler and high liver. "Lucky" otherwise E. J. Baldwin, was shot in the arm at his hotel in San Francisco on Thursday by a woman named Fannie Baldwin, who claims to be his cousin. She charges him with having outraged her. She was at one time a school teacher in Santa Anita district, Los Angeles county. Baldwin's wound is not serious. A shower of mud fell in and near Fresno Monday afternoon, covering everything with a light coating of gray, sandy mud. A sand storm at Bakersfield continued from Sunday night until Monday morning. The railroad track was obstructed and the air so thick that it was impossible to see more than thirty feet ahead. The following story is going the rounds in Washington Territory: A curiosity in the potato line is from the cellar of E. Meeker of Puyallup. A sack of potatoes thrown into a barrel had become withered and were about to be thrown out, when it was discovered that in each and every one of them was a hill of young potatoes, some of which, pink-colored and fresh as a rose, were bursting through the skin of the parent potato, and all this, apparently, without external sprouting. These young ones are in clusters and all sizes less than that of a walnut. WASHINGTON, Jan 3d. The case of Ballard vs. McKinney, just decided by the Secretary of the Interior, involves a construction of the rules of practice of the land office. Ballard's pre-emption entry in Los Angeles district, Cal., was contested by McKinney. The Land Registrar met Ballard's attorney on the street and told him the decision was against his client. Ballard's appeal was refused by the Commissioner of the Land Office on the ground that it was not filed before the expiration of the thirty days' limit. The Secretary holds that the notice of the original decision should have been properly served upon Ballard in writing and because this had not been done the appeal was entertained and upon a review of the case Ballard's entry was confirmed. RALEIGH, N.C., January 21. As thirty Penitentiary convicts, mostly negroes, and two white guards, engaged at the Cowee Tunnel, on the Western North Carolina Railroad, in Jackson county, were crossing the Turkaseegee river on a flatboat. Saturday morning it was discovered the boat was leaking. The alarm caused a panic, and the men all rushed to one end, when it sank. A point of swift and deep rapids was low, and the men clung together in knots, Grape Cuttings. 100,000 BERGER, GOLDEN CHASSELLAS, BLACK MOSS and ZINFANDEL GRAPE CUTTINGS FOR SALE M.O.E INGER Anabeu Real Estate for 1882. The following are the number of conveyances and the amount of considerations for real estate transactions for 1882 in Los Angeles county: Amount. Con. January $319,227 48 321 February 405,017 68 325 March 481,104 11 383 April 616,353 29 436 May 512,445 49 350 June 473,319 32 360 July 424,214 87 345 August 586,473 72 390 September 573,156 86 379 October 767,908 53 325 November 665,611 50 456 December 707,828 54 463 Total $6,532,661 39 4533 A boat conveying passengers Wednesday from Oppan to Ludwigshafen was dashed against a tree and thirty-five persons were drowned in the lake of Constance. The lake of Constance is 1,283 feet above the sea level and forms a common center, which Switzerland, Austria, Baden, Bavaria and Wurtemburg meet. Its waters are of a dark green hue, and are subject to mysterious rises. In 1770 the lake rose in one hour to a height of twenty-four feet above its ordinary level. Navigation on the lake is rendered both difficult and dangerous by violent squalls, which seldom give warning of their approach. Raleigh, N.C., January 2d.—As thirty Penitentiary convicts, mostly negroes, and two white guards, engaged at the Cowe Tunnel, on the Western North Carolina Railroad, in Jackson county, were crossing the Turkaseegee river on a flatboat, Saturday morning. It was discovered the boat was leaking. The alarm caused a panic, and the men all rushed to one end, when it sank. A point of swift and deep rapids was just below, and the men clung together in knots, those who could not swim holding to those who could. Some were carried into the rapids and drowned. Only twelve of the convicts were saved. One of the guards was washed ashore below the rapids insensible, but was restored to consciousness. Washington, January 2d.—Friends of President Arthur say that he is very superstitious, and he has constantly haunted since Garfield died. They predict that the death of Allen in the White House, just as the President was renewing the galeries which had been discontinued since Garfield died, will have a depressing effect upon Arthur. Mrs. Sillwell, of Mount Vernon, Ohio, wife of a railroad employee, on her death bed from consumption, confessed to murdering her first husband, her daughter, aged 14, and a stranger. The latter was killed for money. She also confessed to three attempts to kill her present husband to get his life insurance. At the Presidential reception on New Year's day, Hon. Elisha A. Allen, Hawaiian Minister, dropped dead of heart disease. A Vexed Clergyman. Even the patience of Job would become exhausted were he a preacher and endeavoring to interest his audience while they were keeping up an incessant coughing, making it impossible for him to be heard. Yet, how very easy can all this be avoided by simply using Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughes and Colds. Trial Bottles given away by W. M. Higgins, Druggist. Are You Exposed? To malarial influences? then protect your system by using Parker’s Ginger Tonic. strengthens the liver and kidneys to throw off malarial poisons, and is good for general debility and nervous exhaustion. Thanking the public for their patronage in the past I hope to continue to merit it by keeping a little stock and selling goods a little lower than any else. J.HELSEE jane-1m GRAND OPENING AT THE DRY GOODS PALACE. Our Mr. Goodman has just returned from San Francisco, not from the Eastern Markets, but we assure our customers and patrons that the prices in the future in our establishment will be such that cannot be beat in any outside of San Francisco. The stock we are just now opening is the Largest and best Selected that ever came to Anaheim. It consists of all the Latest Styles in Every Line, and we particularly call the attention of the public to examine our prices and patronize us. We feel safe to say They can Save Money by Buying from us. Our aim is to keep all the trade of the surrounding country. Our Motto hereafter is "QUICK SALES AND SMALL PROFITS." Cash will tell whether we can sell cheaper than any place outside of San Francisco. Our stock is too numerous to mention everything in detail, but it consists of a FULL LINE OF LADIES DRESS GOODS, UNDERWEAR, LACES, RIBBONS, HOSIERY, SILKS AND SATINS, TRIMMINGS of all kinds. "QUICK SALES AND SMALL PROFITS." CASH will tell whether we can sell cheaper than any place outside of San Francisco. Our stock is too numerous to mention everything in detail, but it consists of a FULL LINE OF LADIES DRESS GOODS, UNDERWEAR, LACES, RIBBONS, HOSIERY, SILKS AND SATINS, TRIMMINGS of all kinds, Flannels, Shawls, All kinds of KNIT GOODS for Ladies and Children, and especially a fine lot of LADIES' CLOAKS, ULSTERS and DOLMANS. Also the finest stock of LADIES SHOES that ever came to the place. And a line line of Gents Clothing, OVERCOATS, BOOTS and SHOES, Eastern Styles; HATS and CAPS, Gents Furnishing Goods, Children and Youth's Clothing, Ladies' and Gents Kid Gloves, a large assortment of Trunks, Valises and Ladies Fancy Articles, BOOTS and SHOES. And a large assortment of Fancy Goods in every line, too numerous to mention. Don't forget to call at the DRY GOODS PALACE and examine the prices and goods. No trouble to show Goods early or late. Elegance always in order in our establishment. GOODMAN & RIMPAU. THE GREAT STORM Of January 12th, 1882, which injured or destroyed stores of Windmills in Los Angeles County proved conclusively that the CALIFORNIA WINDMILL is the only one that can stand uninjured, a heavy sale although some of nearly every other manuature is destroyed so far as known every one of the California Mills put up by the underigned escapement injury. These Mills are so strongly made and so perfectly self regulating that, when properly put up, it is almost impossible for a storm to injure them. It is also superior to other Mills in having an ADJUSTABLE STROKE (4 different lengths) in the ease and misseasness of its work, in the beauty of its design and finish and in the marvelously low price at which the sold. I will furnish these Mills with bumpers and tanks, and set them up in complete running order at the lowest possible rates. For further particulars call upon on address N. B. NMITH, Amheim, Cal., The General Agent for Los Angeles Count LUMBER YARD PLANING, SAWING, AND MOULDING MILLS. OF Saxton & Cox, Notice to Creditors. Estate of Henry F. Evans, deceased. Notice is hereby given by the undersigned Administratrix of the estate of Henry F. Evans, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against the said deceased, to exhibit them with the necessary凭证s within four months after the first publication of this notice to the said Administratrix, at the law office of Robt W. Scott, Esq., in Anaheim, Cal., the same being he place for the transaction of the business of said estate. ANN E. EVANS, Administratrix of the estate of said deceased. December 30th, 1882. R. W. Storr, Atty for Estate dec20-4t Notice to Creditors. LUMBER YARD PLANING, SAWING, AND MOULDING MILLS. Of Saxton & Cox, Anaheim, NEAR THE RAILROAD DEPOT All Varieties of Pine, Redwood, and Spruce LUMBER! Doors, Sashes, and Blinds, Grape Boxes, Fruit Boxes, Bee-Hives, and Fruit Dryers. Builders' Hardware and Nails Plain and Fancy SCROLL SAWING at short Notices Anaheim Crist Mill! Grain, Feed, Meal, etc., of all Varieties. CORN SHELLED AND SHIPPED. ANAHEIM STORAGE WAREHOUSE. GRAIN, WOOL, AND GENERAL MERCHANDISE TAKEN ON STORAGE. GRAIN SACKS and TWINE constantly on han CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED Of all kinds of PRODUCE. Advances made, MER CHANDISE forwarded and sold on Commission 1 best Markets. P. PELLEGRIN, PRACTICAL Watchmaker and Jeweler, CENTER ST., - ANAHEIM Repairing of Watches, Clocks and Jewelry dense promptly and warranted. Sole Agent for the Johnston Optical Co.'s ImprovSpectacles and Eye-Glasses (interchangeable). Improved Eye Tester to perfectly suit the eye. Notice to Creditors. ESTATE OF HENRY P EVANS, DECEASED. Notice is hereby given by the undersigned Administratrix of the estate of Henry P Evans, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against the said deceased, to exhibit them with the necessary documents within four months after the first publication of this notice to the said Administratrix, at the law office of Robt W. Scott Esq., in Anaheim, Cal., the same being he place for the transaction of the business of said estate. ANN E. EVANS, Administratrix of the estate of said deceased. December 30th, 1882. R. W. Scott, Atty for Estate. Notice to Creditors. ESTATE OF HIRAM H CROSS, DECEASED. Notice is hereby given by the undersigned Administratrix of the estate of Hiram H Cross, deceased, in the creditors of, and all persons having claims against the said deceased, to exhibit them with the necessary documents within four months after the first publication of this notice to the said Administratrix, at the law office of Robt W. Scott Esq., in Anaheim, Cal., the same being he place for the transaction of the business of said estate. ANN E. EVANS, Administratrix of the estate of said deceased. December 30th, 1882. R. W. Scott, Atty for Estate. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT, In and for the County of Los Angeles, State of California, Order to show cause on application of Guardian for Order of Sale of Real Estate, In the matter of the estate and guardianship of Louisa Keller, an incompetent. ON READING AND FILEING THE PETITION OF Theodore Renier, the guardian of the person and estate of Louisa Keller, an incompetent, praying for an order of sale of certain real estate belonging to his said ward for the uses and purposes therein set forth. It is hereby ordered that the next of kin of the said ward and all persons interested in the said estate, appear before this Court on Saturday, the 27th day of January, 1883, at ten o'clock A.M., at the Court room of this Court, at the Court House in the said County of Los Angeles, then and there to show cause why an order should not be granted for the sale of such estate. And it is further ordered that a copy of this order be published at least four (4) successive weeks before the said day of hearing, in the Anaheim Gazette, a newspaper printed and published in said County of Los Angeles. Date December 19th, 1882. V. E. HOWARD, Superior Judge. Remember the CREAM OF 1ARTAR WORKS. P. RANZONI, THE PROPRIETOR, RESPECTfully requests wine growers to save all their deposits from wine, etc., which he will buy and pay cash for. He has removed his factory to J. Bernard's place, on Alameda street, Los Angeles, and added many improvements. Address: P. O. Box 268. Dec 20